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October 2009 Issue
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Criminal
Background Checks:
Exercising Caution and Grace
by David Roach
Recent statistics suggest that
criminal background checks are a must for every children's and
youth worker in every Southern Baptist church. And experts echo
the warning.
At the same time, the results of theological education programs
in two state prison systems serve as a reminder that the Gospel
transforms lives and renders many former criminals fit for Christian
service.
LifeWay Christian Resources of the Southern Baptist Convention
teamed up last year with Backgroundchecks.com to offer discounted
background checks to ministries around the nation. Since then,
of the 450 churches that requested background checks, one in seven
applicants for ministry positions were found to have a criminal
history that may have disqualified them from volunteering or working
in a particular role in a church. Out of more than five thousand
background checks performed, eighty uncovered serious felony offenses,
such as sexual battery against a child under age 16, felony larceny,
and first degree rape. More than six hundred turned up other potentially
disqualifying offenses such as driving while intoxicated, possession
of illegal drugs, and battery/assault.
Bob Perkins, chief of campus police at The Southern Baptist
Theological Seminary, in Louisville, Kentucky, and a veteran law
enforcement official, said that while hidden criminal pasts may
be less common in the church than the business world, all prior
offenses should raise concern regarding potential ministry workers.
"We believe that background investigations, both electronic
and standard (such as checking references), should be conducted
on all paid employees, staff, and volunteers. This is just a good
practice that could prevent a problem," he said, adding,
however, that background checks cannot catch all would-be criminals.
Congregations that fail to conduct background checks may be
liable to lawsuits if criminals sneak into ministry positions
and subsequently victimize church goers, Perkins noted.
"We know from experience in law enforcement, history within
different denominations, and court cases we read that a small
percentage of criminals gravitate to our churches and schools
with criminal records that could have been discovered," he
said. "Then, when these persons commit another act within
our walls, this often becomes a liability issue that leads to
civil action against our churches."
It is possible to use ex-convicts in ministry, according to
Perkins, but they must first demonstrate that Christ has indeed
changed their lives. Churches must exercise special care not to
allow sex offenders to work with children and youth or to be alone
with anyone in a ministry setting, he said.
"We believe that the Scriptures teach us to openly accept
and love everyone," he said. "This includes those with
a criminal past. Our staff, professionally and spiritually, should
work within our churches to allow such a person to do God's work
[within certain guidelines]."
Still, allowing criminals to serve in ministry "should
be a mentorship type ministry where those with a criminal past,
but now having a servant's heart, work alongside other church
leadership," he said. "What better example can we be
to others than to welcome those with a troubled past to help within
our walls in Christian fellowship and love?"
Despite the great dangers of allowing ex-criminals to serve
in ministry work, Chris Buckhalter is one example of an ex-convict
with a successful ministry. While serving two concurrent twenty-year
sentences for manslaughter and aggravated assault in the Mississippi
State Penitentiary at Parchman, Mississippi, he earned a bachelor
of arts degree in Christian ministry from New Orleans Baptist
Theological Seminary's extension center at the prison. Released
in November 2008, he speaks to children about avoiding the sins
he committed.
And Buckhalter is just one of many. New Orleans Seminary has
been providing theological education to prison inmates in Louisiana
and Mississippi since 1995 and has seen hundreds of criminals
transformed by the Gospel. The inmates can earn both associate's
and bachelor's degrees through the seminary's undergraduate school,
Leavell College.
Many students in the program are serving life sentences and
minister only inside the prison walls yet with quantifiable
fruit. The violence rate at the Louisiana State Penitentiary at
Angola, for example, dropped from 1,074 assaults in 1995 when
the program began to sixty in 2006 out of more than 5,100 maximum
security inmates.
Among the graduates who have been released, several are serving
in pastoral ministry with great success, said John Robson, assistant
professor of Christian ministries at New Orleans Seminary and
higher education coordinator at Angola Prison for the Louisiana
Department of Corrections.
"There's no rehabilitation separate of the Lord coming
inside of a man and changing him from the inside," Robson
said. "There's just no other way. I've seen all kinds of
attempts at rehabilitation, and I am saying, they don't work.
The God we serve is the only one that can change a man."
While graduates of the New Orleans prison extension programs
would have criminal records on any background check, Robson said
background checks have not stopped transformed graduates from
serving Christ.
"I haven't heard of any of our guys having any problems
with credibility with churches because they're obviously going
to tell the churches," he said. "And many times they
have contact with these churches before they get out. So there's
nothing hidden. Consequently, there's no real problem in the ministry."
Johnny Bley, director of New Orleans Seminary's Parchman extension
center, said seven men have earned degrees and subsequently been
released. Two are pastors, one is a youth evangelist, and three
others serve in volunteer capacities at a local church.
How a believer with a criminal past explains the results of
a background check says a lot about his character, according to
Bley.
"Background checks for our graduates would reveal their
past, which none of them would deny," he said. "One
of the most amazing things I've seen in fifteen years of prison
ministry is that inmates who have made a true decision for Christ
all admit their sins and criminal activity. On the flip side,
those who haven't turned to Christ, the majority still try to
lay the blame on ... the police or their parents or the person
sitting next to them.
"From what I've observed of those who have gotten out,
none have had a problem being accepted into local churches. ...
These men are not afraid of a background check and their lifestyles
will soon reveal to a local church the change Jesus has made in
their lives."
Bley's advice to churches where an ex-convict wants to serve
is to use wisdom and ease the person into ministry slowly with
plenty of supervision. He recommends the same process for all
ministry volunteers, whether they have a criminal record or not.
"One of the most important but most often overlooked processes
in the early church is mentoring," he said. "Prospective
deacons were to be tried and then let them serve. All volunteers
should be tried before being given responsibilities in the church.
Personally, I believe many of our churches are suffering the effects
of volunteers who were never mentored and do not know how or even
why they are doing what they do."
He also advises congregations to keep ex-convicts away from
ministries where they could be tempted to repeat their crimes
even though they are new creations in Christ.
"Wisdom would teach me to use such a man after being mentored,
trained, tried, but not use him in an area of ministry which might
put him back into a situation where he might be tempted in the
manner in which he failed in the past," Bley said.
David Roach is pastor of Emmanuel Baptist
Church in Shelbyville, Kentucky.
For more information on background check services, go to
www.LifeWayStores.com/backgroundchecks.
Editor's Note
It is easy, and perhaps understandable, for churches to be
wary of welcoming people with criminal backgrounds into their
fellowships. However, we dare not forget Paul's instruction to
the Corinthian church:
Do you not know that the unjust will not inherit God's kingdom?
Do not be deceived: no sexually immoral people, idolaters, adulterers,
male prostitutes, homosexuals, thieves, greedy people, drunkards,
revilers, or swindlers will inherit God's kingdom. Some of
you were like this; but you were washed, you were sanctified,
you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ
and by the Spirit of our God. (1 Corinthians 6:9-11, emphasis
added)
This passage clearly indicates that when the Gospel is at work
in a church, and through it to the surrounding community, lives
will be changed dramatically. A healthy church will have
members with sordid pasts. Of course appropriate safeguards must
be in place, but how marvelous it would be if our churches saw
a dramatic increase in members whose background checks revealed
such things, but whose transformed lives revealed even more dramatically
the power of the Gospel.
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